• Title/Summary/Keyword: Familial specificity

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Eye Movement and Schizophrenia (안구운동과 정신분열병)

  • Kim, Chul-Eung
    • Sleep Medicine and Psychophysiology
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    • v.3 no.1
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    • pp.3-14
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    • 1996
  • Eye movement dysfunction has been found in large numbers of schizophrenia patients and their first-degree relatives and can be studied without the interference of deficits in attention, motivation, clinical status and medication effects with relatively easy method. Eye movement dysfunction has been proposed as a useful way of expanding the schizophrenia phenotype in genetic studies. I review the literature on eye movement dysfunction with respect to syndrome and familial specificity and the quantitative assessment of eye tracking. I hope that the etiology and the pathophysiology of schizophrenia can be clarified through this eye movement study.

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Universal Narrative of a Familial Comedy: Ins Choi's Kim's Convenience (보편 서사로서의 가족희극, 인스 최의 『김씨네 편의점』)

  • Lee, Yonghee
    • American Studies
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    • v.44 no.2
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    • pp.67-96
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    • 2021
  • The Canadian public broadcaster CBC had successfully aired a sitcom centered on a Korean immigrant family from 2016 to 2021. The show is based on the play Kim's Convenience written by a Korean-Canadian playwright Ins Choi. This study explores literary features of Kim's Convenience that accounts for its popularity; three elements of the show play crucial roles in maintaining the balance between specificity and universality. First, Choi deploys a Korean immigrant story in the form of comedy. Second, the main plot revolves around an ordinary family with generational strains that ends in reconciliation. Third. the Kims are depicted more as an archetypical family than a stereotypically Asian one. By closely interweaving these elements, Choi induces the audience to find commonalities from the show, and racial specificities of the Kim's family become "spicy" attractions of the play.